Schmied A, Morin D, Vedel J P, Pagni S
Laboratory of Physiologie et Physiopathologie Neuromusculaire humaine UPR-CNRS Neurobiologie et Mouvements, Marseille, France.
Exp Brain Res. 1997 Feb;113(2):214-29. doi: 10.1007/BF02450320.
The question of whether muscle spindle afferents might control human motoneurone activity on the basis of the "size principle" during voluntary contraction was investigated by recording the discharge of single motor units (n = 196) in wrist extensor muscles while stimulating the homonymous muscle spindles by means of tendon taps. The mechanical stimuli were delivered with a constant post-spike delay of 80 ms so that the resulting afferent volleys could be expected to reach the motoneurones towards the end of the inter-spike interval (mean +/- SD duration: 124.7 +/- 11.9 ms). In the six subjects tested, the response probability was found to be significantly correlated with the motor units' functional parameters. Differences in twitch rise times, twitch amplitudes, recruitment thresholds and macro-potential areas were found to account for 18%, 9%, 6% and 2% of the differences in the response probability observed within the whole population of motor units tested. These differences could not be due to differences in firing rate for two reasons: first, the motor units were found to discharge with a similar range of inter-spike intervals whatever their functional characteristics; secondly, the weak positive correlation observed between the response probability and the motor unit firing rate showed parallel regression lines between the late-recruited fast-contracting motor units and the first-recruited slowly contracting motor units, but the y-intercept was significantly higher in the latter case. This confirmed that the responses of the first-recruited slowly contracting motor units tended to be larger whatever the firing rates. In most of the pairs tested in the same experiment, the motor units which had the lowest recruitment thresholds, longest contraction times, smallest contraction forces or smallest motor unit macro-potentials tended to produce the largest responses, which also had the longest latencies. Taking the response latency to be an index of a motoneurone's conduction velocity and therefore of its size, the data obtained with this index and with other functional indices such as the twitch rise times and amplitudes, the macro-potential areas and the recruitment thresholds-can be said to be fully consistent with the "size principle", as previously found in anaesthetized animals. It can be inferred that the presynaptic inhibition which is liable to take action during voluntary contraction does not seem to alter the graded distribution of the muscle afferent projections to human wrist extensor motoneurones.
通过在腕伸肌中记录单个运动单位(n = 196)的放电情况,同时通过肌腱叩击刺激同名肌梭,研究了在随意收缩过程中肌梭传入纤维是否可能基于“大小原则”控制人类运动神经元活动。机械刺激以80毫秒的恒定峰后延迟施加,以便预期由此产生的传入冲动在峰间间隔结束时(平均±标准差持续时间:124.7±11.9毫秒)到达运动神经元。在所测试的6名受试者中,发现反应概率与运动单位的功能参数显著相关。在整个测试的运动单位群体中,发现收缩上升时间、收缩幅度、募集阈值和宏电位面积的差异分别占观察到的反应概率差异的18%、9%、6%和2%。这些差异不可能是由于放电频率的差异,原因有两个:第一,无论其功能特性如何,发现运动单位以相似的峰间间隔范围放电;第二,在反应概率与运动单位放电频率之间观察到的弱正相关显示,在晚期募集的快速收缩运动单位和首先募集的缓慢收缩运动单位之间存在平行回归线,但在后一种情况下y轴截距显著更高。这证实了无论放电频率如何,首先募集的缓慢收缩运动单位的反应往往更大。在同一实验中测试的大多数对中,具有最低募集阈值、最长收缩时间、最小收缩力或最小运动单位宏电位的运动单位往往产生最大的反应,其潜伏期也最长。将反应潜伏期作为运动神经元传导速度的指标,因此也是其大小的指标,用该指标以及其他功能指标如收缩上升时间和幅度、宏电位面积和募集阈值获得的数据,可以说是与先前在麻醉动物中发现的“大小原则”完全一致。可以推断,在随意收缩过程中易于起作用的突触前抑制似乎不会改变肌肉传入纤维投射到人类腕伸肌运动神经元的分级分布。